4.7 Article

Checkpoint kinases and the INO80 nucleosome remodeling complex enhance global chromatin mobility in response to DNA damage

Journal

GENES & DEVELOPMENT
Volume 27, Issue 18, Pages 1999-2008

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1101/gad.222992.113

Keywords

DNA damage response; Mec1; chromatin mobility; double-strand breaks; INO80

Funding

  1. FP7 Marie Curie Network Nucleosome 4D
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation National Centre for Competence in Research Frontiers in Genetics
  3. Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research

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Double-strand break repair by recombination requires a homology search. In yeast, induced breaks move significantly more than undamaged loci. To examine whether DNA damage provokes an increase in chromatin mobility generally, we tracked undamaged loci under DNA-damaging conditions. We found that the yeast checkpoint factors Mec1, Rad9, and Rad53 are required for genome-wide increases in chromatin mobility, but not the repair protein Rad51. Mec1 activation by targeted Ddc1/Ddc2 enhances chromatin mobility even in the absence of damage. Finally, the INO80 chromatin remodeler is shown to act downstream from Mec1 to increase chromatin mobility, highlighting an additional damage-related role of this nucleosome remodeling complex.

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